We celebrated the launch of a new membership platform for start-up schools and learning communities, with six days of webinars that addressed this question and painted a picture of how education should and could be reimagined for the 21st century.
“Education doesn’t need to be reformed – it needs to be transformed”
- Sir Ken Robinson
“Education doesn’t need to be reformed – it needs to be transformed”
- Sir Ken Robinson
The 2024 Good Childhood Report highlighted ‘school’ as an area of concern for children’s wellbeing.
- The Children’s Society
Referrals to Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services (CAMHS) have risen by 50% since 2020.
- NHS England
21% of pupils were recorded as “persistently absent” in 2022/23.
- House of Commons Library
After five years of teaching, almost a third of teachers leave the profession.
- Department for Education
The top skills required by workers today include: Analytical thinking; Creative thinking; Resilience, flexibility and agility; Motivation and self-awareness; Curiosity and lifelong learning; Technological literacy; Dependability and attention to detail; Empathy and active listening.
- World Economic Forum ‘Future of Jobs Report’ 2023
Businesses have lost faith in exams. 89% believe it is important that students are assessed on more than academic attainment.
- Times Education
Commission 2023
Up to seven million workers in England may lack the Essential Employment Skills they need to do their jobs by the year 2035.
- National Foundation for Educational Research
Through the INSPIRE Education Summit recordings, listen to thought leaders who shared their vision for the future of education.
Andrew's talk
We all know the mental health crisis in education is reaching crisis point, and we know addressing it is a priority for young people, educators & parents/carers alike. This presentation will serve as a rallying call to action for a significant cultural shift within schools towards a culture of well-being; one wherein we are encouraged to put our mental health first and are taught to hold rest in equal regard to work. We need to give young people & teachers the dignity of a healthy work-life balance, so that no one in education is under the ridiculous amounts of pressure they are now.
Andrew will share his own harrowing account of struggling at school, and provide practical insight, based on his experience, as to how we can all play an active role in changing this.
About Andrew
Andrew's journey in education reform started at school. As the quiet kid at the back of the class who just about plodded-along, he struggled in a high-pressure system that undermined his mental health. Realising it was a systemic issue, Andrew took action to embed a culture of well-being in his school and then spread this well-being revolution far and wide.
Andrew has served previously as the Member of Youth Parliament for Blackpool (2019 - 22) and the Chair of Blackpool Youth Council (2019 - 20, 2021 - 22). He currently sits as the Youth Voice Representative on a local school improvement board, where he has coordinated Emoco - a co-production project looking to embed cultures of well-being through whole-school, participatory approaches. Andrew won a £15,000 Special Recognition Prize in the 2023 Big Education Challenge with Emoco.
Andrew now works as a co-production facilitator as part of Emoco, supporting schools to co-produce well-being solutions that work for the whole-school community.
Iris' talk
Iris Chen started out as a demanding tiger mother who expected her sons to achieve academic excellence and success, just like she had. Then... she discovered unschooling and everything she believed about education began to unravel. In this workshop, author and Untigering founder Iris Chen will discuss how to leave behind conformist, capitalistic, and colonial standards of compulsory schooling and how to practice decolonisation through self-directed education instead.
About Iris
Iris Chen is an unschooling mother, certified parenting coach, and founder of the Untigering movement. When her authoritarian attempts to raise obedient and high-achieving children only led to years of tears, tantrums, and conflict, she knew something had to change… and it wasn’t her children.
Through her writing and speaking, Iris now shares her healing journey of shifting from power-over to power-with in her relationship with her children. Her mission is to inspire generational and cultural transformation through conscious parenting, self-directed learning, and decolonization, especially among Asian communities.
You can read more about her adventures in her book "Untigering: Peaceful Parenting for the Deconstructing Tiger Parent" and on her blog at untigering.com.
Becky's talk
Play is a fertile ground for developing life-long learning habits - But how can we embed them, make them explicit and ensure growth, depth and breadth over time?
This workshop will explore how to intentionally deepen, broaden and strengthen habits of minds through play, whether you have "Learner Attributes", "Characteristics of Effective Learning" or "Elements of Learning Power" from the Learning Power Approach, these lifelong learning skills will transcend children's time in school. Through paying attention to how we cultivate Learning Habits, we can maximise their impact for students now and in the future.
About Becky
Becky Carlzon is the founder of two professional educational online learning networks, Learning Pioneers and PressPlay. Both of her platforms are based on research into collective efficacy, the power of community and teacher agency and collaboration.
As a classroom practitioner, the heart of Becky's practice is underpinned by the Design Principles of the Learning Power Approach (LPA) and are outlined in her book, "Powering up Children". Through staying connected with LPA schools and fellow practitioners in her learning communities, Becky is at the forefront of impactful, innovative practice across the globe.
About Charlotte
Singer-songwriter, actress, TV presenter and political activist, Charlotte Church is the founder of The Awen Project, a pioneering new model for education, where young people are championed to be themselves and follow their passions as active participants in a democratic community.
Charlotte has led an extraordinary life, touring the world from the age of 12 to perform in opera houses and for some of the most powerful people in the world. She studied her academic subjects on transatlantic flights and did GCSEs in the White House.
Her vision for The Awen Project came as a mother balking at the unnatural way schools organise children and systematically deny them basic freedoms. She embarked upon an extensive research and development project to understand how education was being done in the best schools in the country, from Springwell Learning Community in Barnsley, to Eton College. Ultimately it was Sands School in Devon that provided the greatest inspiration, and she founded The Awen Project as a charity to support democratic learning communities in 2019.
Charlotte's interview will be followed by a talk from Derry Hannam
Author and ex-HMI for Ofsted, Derry Hannam, is calling for schools and the government to consider his 20% proposal, to give young people time each week to follow their passions.
Choosing the 'Rights' Direction - Using the UNCRC To Steer Education
Je'anna and Sifaan's talk
Je'anna Clements and Sifaan Zavahir are Democratic Education veterans from South Africa and Sri Lanka respectively. They have teamed up to share their mutual discovery that the easiest way to tackle the Gordian Knot of contemporary education policy discourse is to cut through it with the sword of Human Rights. The Rights-Centric Education framework offers a simple, powerful, and globally appropriate 'GPS' or compass to steer education in the 'rights' direction. They're inviting everyone to come on board to help bring education into alignment with the evolution of human rights.
About Je'anna
Je'anna Clements is a mother, writer, and passionate advocate for children's rights. She is co-founder and facilitator of Riverstone Village, a Self-Directed Education (SDE) community in South Africa. With an Honours degree in Psychology, Je'anna went on to pursue self-education in SDE, becoming a specialist in the field. She offers international training and support for SDE facilitators and unschooling parents, focusing on empowering young people, including those with Pathological Demand Avoidance (PDA).
Je'anna has authored several books, including "What if School Creates DYSlexia?", "Help, My Kid Hates School!", and the "Helping the Butterfly Hatch" series for SDE facilitators. She has served as an Oversight Committee member at EUDEC (European Democratic Education Community), and co-founded Fhree.org, and MyLifeMy.Education before becoming a Founding Member of the Rights-Centric Education network. With over 18 years of experience, Je'anna’s work reflects her commitment to helping others navigate and achieve best practice in the world of Self-Directed Education.
About Sifaan
Sifaan Zavahir managed to keep-alive into adulthood a common childhood skill that is often suppressed: insatiably asking discomfiting questions. That process took him through programming, engineering, leadership development for corporates to, eventually, education, where he identifies as a Dehegemonizer: in Sri Lanka at Kinder Republic, a Democratic School he co-founded in 2021, and internationally via Rights-Centric Education. He is also working on a new "operating system" for education where communities are learning "with" each other (instead of "from" experts) based on abundance, consent and trust.
James' talk
In this session Dr James Mannion will outline a vision of an education system
characterised by a wider variety of school types, a broader and more responsive
curriculum, and a representative approach to school leadership.
About James
Dr James Mannion is the Director of Rethinking Education, a teacher training organisation specialising in implementation and improvement science, self-regulated learning and practitioner inquiry. He is the author of "Fear is the Mind Killer: Why Learning to Learn Deserves Lesson Time - And How to Make it Work For Your Pupils" (Mannion & McAllister, 2020) and "Making Change Stick: A Practical Guide to Implementing School Improvement" (Mannion, 2025; in press).
A former teacher and school leader of 12 years, James has an MA in person-centred education from the University of Sussex and a PhD in self-regulated learning from the University of Cambridge.
James is an Associate of Oracy Cambridge and a By-Fellow of Hughes Hall, University of Cambridge.
He is also the host of the popular Rethinking Education podcast and conference network.
Naomi's talk
Children are born full of curiosity, ready to learn about the world. They explore and interrogate people around them, driven by their desire to understand and participate. Then they go to school, where they are told to sit on their bottoms and that learning is something which happens when you follow instructions.
By the time they are teenagers, the spark of curiosity has gone. Learning is no longer something they seek out. The question they most often ask is ‘Is it on the test?’. The adults around them despair. They are going through the motions.
This is not inevitable. We know from self-directed teenagers that that spark of curiosity doesn’t have to be extinguished. It can grow as children grow up. But that requires the adults to think differently about school and learning. It requires us to let go of many of our most fondly held beliefs about what education should be, and instead focus on helping children learn.
In this talk, Dr Naomi Fisher will talk about the psychology of children’s learning, and how schools could reorganise to take advantage of children’s unique strengths and capacity for learning.
About Naomi
Dr Naomi Fisher is a clinical psychologist and author who writes about the intersection between education and child psychology. She has written two books on self-directed education, "Changing Our Minds" and "A Different Way to Learn". Her latest book (with Eliza Fricker) "When the Naughty Step Makes Things Worse" came out in October 2024.
She runs popular webinars for parents on helping children with their mental health and specialises in trauma, autism and alternative education.
Kate's talk
Within the materials of The Sir Ken Robinson Archive lies a roadmap for educational transformation - one that is more relevant today than ever before. Through letters, unpublished writings, and original research materials, we see the evolution of revolutionary ideas about human creativity and learning that illuminate our path forward. As we stand at a crossroads in education, the Sir Ken Robinson Archive offers profound insights into how we might reimagine learning for today's world. By examining these foundational materials and building upon their wisdom, we can envision and create an educational paradigm that truly serves human flourishing.
About Kate
Kate Robinson is a passionate advocate for unleashing human potential through creativity and education. She is the co-author of "Imagine if... Creating a Future for Us All", which serves as the manifesto for her father Sir Ken Robinson.
Kate is dedicated to continuing Sir Ken's legacy and champions creativity as an essential skill for navigating an uncertain future. She inspires audiences to radically rethink existing systems, envisioning a world rebuilt on creativity, collaboration, and compassion. Kate firmly believes in our collective power to recreate the worlds we inhabit.
Ellie, Adam and Chris' talk
A solutions focussed exploration of the challenges facing us all in thinking about the education and nurture of children and young people.
About Ellie
Ellie works nationally across policy and practice to effect cultural and systemic change on behalf of all children who experience barriers to school attendance. She gave evidence to the Education Select Committee in 2023 and has collaborated with broadcast news (BBC, Channel 4, ITN, Sky News) and documentaries (Panorama) to tell the stories of families and professionals struggling in the current system.
She is co-author of the critically acclaimed book “Square Pegs: compassion, inclusion and fitting in - a guide for schools” and is Parliamentary Vice Co-Chair for the Council for Disabled Children’s Special Education Consortium. She has been invited to join the Who is Losing Learning Solutions Council, convened by the IPPR and The Difference.
A Therapeutic Parent and carer, mental health, wellbeing, neuroscience and child development inform Ellie’s advocacy and campaigning. She is a critical thinker, curiosity geek and lifelong learner.
About Adam
As the Director of Diversity and Inclusion at the University of Wolverhampton, Adam is deeply committed to working towards eliminating inequality and promoting diversity, inclusion, and belonging in all aspects of education. His dual Nigerian/Scouse heritage, coupled with over two decades of experience in the wider educational sector, ranging from early years through to primary, secondary and now Higher Education, has shaped his unique perspective and fuelled his passion for transformative change.
Adam is currently finalising his doctoral research on cultural competence in education, which enhances his leadership in initiatives aimed at closing awarding and recruitment gaps, diversifying curricula, and boosting staff representation from underrepresented groups. His cultural competence continuum has been specifically adapted for Square Pegs.
A seasoned leader and changemaker in education, Adam's strategic and research-based approach is dedicated to making a lasting impact on both the educational landscape and wider society. He leverages his expertise to influence policy, drive systemic change, and empower communities, affirming his role as a pivotal figure in educational reform.
About Chris
Chris started his career as a secondary school teacher and later trained as an Educational Psychologist. For the last ten years he has worked as a practitioner psychologist, mostly in the Youth Justice sector, Pupil Referral Unit and child prison contexts. Chris is a lecturer, tutor and doctorate research supervisor on the Child and Adolescent Educational Psychology course at the Institute of Education, UCL.
Chris is Non-Executive Director of Square Peg, joining in 2022 to support the transition as Fran retired from the organisation and Ellie became Executive Director.
At States of Mind, he is Director of Research and collaborates with UCL and others to conduct participatory action research that generates young peoples’ insights and empowers them to facilitate societal change.
Over the years, Chris has written numerous journal articles, alongside book chapters and opinion pieces in media such as The Independent, The Guardian, Byline Times, Schoolsweek, The Psychologist and other publications. He has also appeared on numerous podcasts and videos with a focus on education transformation and is a musician and recording artist.
Gina's talk
This presentation examines the theories of Self-Determination, Cognitive Evaluation, and Intrinsic Motivation (Deci & Ryan, 1985, 2000) as they apply to unschooling and other self-directed learning models. In traditional classrooms, mandated curriculum and time constraints often limit opportunities to foster intrinsic motivation. However, the greatest strength of unschooling and similar approaches lies in their emphasis on a learner's innate curiosity. Imagine a learning process where the entire journey revolves around a learner’s inner drive to explore, discover, and thrive? Together, let’s explore the transformative power of unschooling and how embracing intrinsic motivation in education can truly change the world.
About Gina
Gina Riley, Ph.D., is an educational psychologist, Program Director, and Clinical Professor of Adolescent Special Education at CUNY – Hunter College. She has conducted significant research on homeschooling and unschooling, an educational method and philosophy that advocates student intrinsic motivation as a primary means for learning.
In addition to her research on self-directed learning environments, Dr. Riley has expertise in Supported Decision Making, an alternative to guardianship for students with disabilities. Dr. Riley also has extensive experience in online, hybrid, and HyFlex education, having been actively involved in the field since 1998.
Her contributions to educational psychology and alternative education models have been influential in shaping contemporary discussions about personalized and flexible learning approaches.
Dr. Riley is the author of numerous academic articles and three books, including "Unschooling: Exploring Learning Beyond the Classroom" (Palgrave, 2020), "The Homeschooling Starter Guide" (Simon & Schuster, 2021), and "The Joys of Self Determined Learning: A Collection of Essays" (Ricci Publishing, 2022).
She is the current President-Elect of the New York State Association of Teacher Educators.
Zoë's interview
For the first part of this session, join Limitless podcast host, Alex O’Neill as she interviews Zoë Neill Readhead, principal of Summerhill, one of the most famous schools in the world.
What is a Democratic School? How do students create their own rules? Does freedom and autonomy really work in practice?
Alex will ask Zoë what inspired her father, A.S. Neill, to set up his democratic school. She will delve into the principles of Neill’s ethos which still stays true today, and why – after 100 years – Summerhill can no longer be called an experiment.
This is a school with an incredible history and a heart-warming story. Find out about how Ofsted tried to close the school down in the 90s, but supporters from all over the world came together to fight for justice. Summerhill (and bus loads of their students!) took Ofsted to court, and following a demonstration of how they run their democratic meetings, they won, and they are still open and thriving today, inspiring other schools and universities across the globe.
About Zoë
Zoë Neill Readhead has been the principal of Summerhill School in Suffolk, UK, since 1985, when she took over from her father, education pioneer, author and Summerhill founder, A.S. Neill.
Summerhill School is the oldest democratic school in the world today. Founded over 100 years ago, their aim is to allow children to grow naturally, to experience personal freedom, to play and develop at their own pace and to go in their own direction whilst taking responsibility for their own actions and the community around them.
Zoë is also the author of "Barefoot in November. Parenting the Summerhill Way".
Expert Insight Panel: Learning Without Being Schooled - New Visions for Education
The panel session
Following on from Zoë's interview, join a panel of experts who are not only able to imagine a different education paradigm but can describe it from their own lived experience as unschooled, self-directed, consent-based learners.
What do you find out about learning, yourself, and the world, when you aren’t forming those opinions from within the current school system but in environments where you have real agency, influence, and choice? How might these insights and experiences contribute to positive change for other young people, and wider education transformation?
Find out what it’s like to step away from the education system and forge a new path as a young person. What sort of ideas, insights and questions will the panel have for now and the future?
The panel will be hosted by Sophie Christophy.
The panel experts
About Nishika
“I’ve lived in the USA, Australia, and currently call the UK my home! My parents are of Indian origin. I’ve always been free to pursue anything that piques my interest, and this has allowed me to discover my passion in writing stories. I love to read both fiction and non-fiction, though largely fiction as that is also what I tend to write most. I’ll always be thankful for the path unschooling is helping me to pursue. Here’s to the adventure!”
About Freya
“I love animals. I love to collect things and I don’t like sitting still in the slightest. I’m super active and I love to make potions, I quite like magic. I’ve never been to school, I’m home educated. I’d like to show people that you shouldn’t feel pressured to choose school. I want there to more optional things, including more things that people are interested in like baking, gardening, sewing, animals and healing/medicine, that people don’t get to learn about in school.”
About Thisbe
“I’ve been home educated my whole life and have been attending a consent-based education setting for most of it, though I am also close to people who are deep in the mainstream system which is interesting. I think when people have conversations about changing education for young people, they are often looking at it from the point of view of not practicing different ways themselves, or not having had that different experience as a child. I think I can provide some insights into what the experience can actually be like.”
About Benji
“I've been attending a self-managed learning community for nearly four years. I like music, art and reading books. I've been home educated my entire life, apart from 6 months where I went to primary school. I am moderately good at self-managing. I love my horse Bucky, and sometimes prefer him to people.”
About Mae
“I have always been home educated. Spending time in a self-directed, consent-based environment with a diverse group of children has equipped me with unique skills and experiences. Because of my education outside of the mainstream, I believe I’m a much more confident and well-rounded person. I have constantly been encouraged and nurtured as an individual by all the adults around me, whether that’s been my parents or other supportive adults I’ve had along the way. I’m grateful I’ve always been encouraged to follow my dreams.”
We hope that the recordings of the above sessions will be a source of inspiration to those who are striving to create something new.
Monday 25th Nov, 7.30-9.30pm GMT
We brought together a panel of experts who have been there and done it, so you can learn how they set up their own innovative schools and learning communities.
Find out how these founders are paving the way for a new paradigm of education, which places children’s rights, 21st century life-skills, social justice and mental health right at the core.
The Cabin and The Lodge
About Sophie
Sophie Christophy is the co-founder of consent-based, self-directed learning communities, The Cabin and The Lodge on the Hertfordshire/Essex border, England.
Sophie is an education visionary and innovator, bringing Consent-Based Education to life in theory and practice. With years of practical experience in creating and holding consent-based, self-directed learning community, her in-depth theoretical, philosophical and personal understanding of the transition to this new education paradigm means Sophie can not only paint a clear picture of this change in action, but answer your ‘how to?’ questions too.
The Cabin and The Lodge
The Cabin (ages 5-11yrs) and The Lodge (ages 10-16yrs) are part-time learning communities catering for home educated young people.
This setting describes self-directed education as, “listening to your self, and exploring the world in the way that is meaningful to you and your own sense of curiosity and purpose. Being able to choose what, when and how you want to learn and do things, based on what feels right to you.”
They describe consent-based education as, “understanding your own agency and autonomy, and the freedom and boundaries that come with that. Being able to say an authentic yes, no or maybe, and respecting the boundaries and consent of others.”
Their other guiding principles include:
(Ed)ucation Positivity;
Shared Decision Making, Risk Management and Conflict Navigation;
Children’s rights, social and environmental justice.
Lumiar and Griffin Club
About Melissa
Melissa Kendall is the co-founder, and formerly director, of the first Lumiar school in the UK. She is now the Managing Director of Griffin Club, a community-led education initiative in Wiltshire, England.
Melissa is a pioneer in innovative education in the UK and says:
“I believe that much of the current education system is too narrowly focused on exams and external affirmation, and that young people need to be given more space and freedom to make mistakes, be creative and follow their own interests. This is the key to developing a lifelong love of learning.”
Lumiar and Griffin Club
At Melissa’s learning community, Griffin Club, young people are empowered to learn from real-world experience and personal mentorship.
Previously, she co-founded Lumiar UK, an independent primary school for children aged 4-11 years, which is based on a working farm in Wiltshire, England.
Lumiar say:
“We’ve reimagined education. We believe it should be an exciting adventure where young people feel engaged and empowered to learn, where curiosity is celebrated, and where asking difficult questions is encouraged.
We aim to send children out into the world with a strong sense of who they are, what they love, and how they are going to make a difference in the world! We do this by inspiring and supporting them – while giving them the space to figure things out for themselves.
We want them to leave our school filled with self-belief and a sense of purpose, ready to rise to the challenge of life in the twenty-first century and excited about whatever the next stage of their adventure looks like.”
Self Managed Learning College
About Ian
Ian chairs the Board of Trustees of the Centre for Self Managed Learning. He created the Self Managed Learning approach in the late 1970’s and founded the Self Managed Learning College (SMLC) in 2001.
SMLC operates as a learning community and has 67 students aged 9 to 17. The community has no curriculum, no imposed lessons, no imposed timetable, no classrooms and no uniform. Students can learn anything they want and in any way that they want!
Ian has published nine books and over 150 articles and papers in areas such as education, learning, leadership and organisational change.
All those who attend this session live, will be entered into a prize draw to win one of Ian’s most recent books, ‘Self Managed Learning and the New Educational Paradigm’.
He has been a Visiting Professor at several universities and has also acted as a learning consultant to most of the world’s largest international companies as well as to the UK National Health Service, Government departments and local authorities.
Self Managed Learning College
The Self Managed Learning College (SMLC) is a democratic, freedom-orientated learning community for home educated young people aged 9-17yrs, based near Brighton in England. Founder, Dr Cunningham says:
“There’s a lot we know about how children and young people learn, for instance they are all different. Yet school assumes that children and young people will learn the same things, in the same way, at the same time, through a fixed curriculum.
The essence of the Self Managed Learning approach is that we provide a structure within which young people can plan, organise and carry out learning activities. We treat each young person as an individual, so we don’t have classrooms or an imposed curriculum. Each student is able to work out for themselves what and how they want to learn.”
SMLC research has shown that this is the most effective way for people to learn. Taking responsibility for one’s own learning, and learning to learn, are vital skills in a fast-changing world. SMLC prepares young people for the test of life, not a life of tests!
The New School
About Lucy
Lucy Stephens is the founder and director of The New School, a democratic, non-fee-paying independent school in London.
This innovative educational charity exists to shape a new approach to education and the student experience, to create better outcomes for children, teachers and the wider community, and to explore ways to expand impact through online resources.
With a background in teaching, degrees in social psychology, nutritional therapy and herbal medicine, and experience working with marginalised young people at the Prince’s Trust, Lucy is determined that The New School will act as a catalyst to evolve the education system in the UK as well as building and sharing an evidence base so that more young people have the chance to fulfil their potential and go on to lead happy lives.
The New School
The New School, which caters for both primary and secondary aged young people, was founded upon the principles of:
Democratic Governance;
Student Voice;
Respectful Relationships;
Authentic Learning;
Inclusion;
Community.
They collaborate with partners, including education leaders and universities, to conduct ground-breaking research that interrogates the building blocks of the current education model and explores avenues to improve it, in order to build a strong case for policy change.
The charity convenes interested parties from connected sectors, like health, likeminded educators, local and national authorities, and funding partners, to facilitate peer to peer learning and collaboration towards a common goal. Together, from a foundation of shared values and beliefs, the aim is to drive this movement forward and catalyse system change.
During this webinar, we launched our new membership community for start-ups. This is your opportunity to sign up for ongoing support and gain access to further advice and guidance from our network of experts.
The INSPIRE Education Summit was brought to you by Jo Symes at Progressive Education and Alex O’Neill from Limitless. We are education activists who have a shared passion for raising awareness of alternatives to mainstream school.
Alex and Jo first teamed up in 2022 to create events and resources to support those who want to set up learning environments where young people can thrive outside of the conventional education system.
We decided to organise the INSPIRE Education Summit to celebrate the launch of our new membership community for start-up schools and learning communities. We hope that these recordings will paint a picture of how education could be reimagined, in order to inspire attendees to create something new.
Alex is the driving force behind Limitless, an organisation dedicated to igniting social change with a special emphasis on revolutionising the education sector.
Through the Limitless podcast, she shares expert insights and neuroscience tips to empower changemakers to tackle the world's most pressing issues.
Alex is committed to uniting individuals who are driven to advance education and supporting them in overcoming obstacles that stand in their way.
Jo is the founder of the social enterprise, Progressive Education. Her website is an inspiration hub for exploring alternatives to conventional schooling and campaigns to bring about change. She is building a
global directory of jobs, events and progressive schools and learning communities.
It began with the launch of the Progressive Education Group on Facebook in 2019, which is an international community of over 10k parents/carers, educators, academics, researchers, psychologists, education innovators, changemakers and young people.